Hi,
I'm totally new to BLAG - and I'm liking it a lot.
One of the first surprises I found was that BLAG doesn't have ntfs support 'out of the box', which is a necessity for me as I'm dual-booting with XP Pro.
Then I learnt from a bit of googling that this is common with all Red Hat/Fedora-based distros (something to do with licences/legalities??).
So, to maybe help other BLAG newbies, I thought I'd post a short HOWTO on ntfs.
I must stress this works for me, but I'm nowhere near experienced enough to guarantee this will work for everyone, and I'd be happy to have it corrected/improved by more experienced forum users.
Also, I apologise in advance if this is like teaching grandma to suck eggs to a lot of you!
Anyway, here's how I did it:

Open a terminal and enter:

su
(root password)
uname -r

This will give you your kernel version - note it down. Next, enter:

uname -m

This gives you your system architecture (i386, i586, i686 etc). Note it down.
Open your web browser and go to www.linux-ntfs.org/content/view/130/66, where you will find a list of ntfs kernel modules. Select the one that matches your kernel and architecture, and download it.

Open a terminal, and su to root, then navigate to the folder containing your ntfs rpm by entering:

CD /location_of_rpm

Now you are going to install the rpm with the command:

rpm -Uvh full_package_name_here.rpm

It should only take a few seconds to install, and you'll be returned to your [root@localhost yourname].

Next, enter:

mkdir /mnt/windows

(You can call the mount directory whatever you like but Windows is the most obvious option, and you must use the same name when you edit your fstab later)

To determine which name BLAG has given to your Windows partition during install, enter:

fdisk -l

In my case, my Windows partition (it'll be the one labelled HPFS/NTFS) is sda1 but make sure you note down the correct name for your system. Now, as root, enter:

gedit /etc/fstab

This launches your fstab (filesystem table) in your text editor, and you need to add a line for your Windows partition as follows:

/dev/your_partition_name_here mnt/windows ntfs auto,umask=0222 0 0

What this means is that your Windows ntfs partition is automatically mounted in /mnt/windows/ and is accessible to both root and users.
If you now reboot, log in with your user name, open your file browser and navigate to /mnt/windows. you should be able to see - and copy across to BLAG - any files from your Windows partition.

Hi Jeff,
I've added my HOWTO on the end of the existing Wiki stuff about enabling NTFS access - I didn't like to remove the other entries, being a new guy on the BLAG scene. I haven't tried the other ways but I know my way works, at least for me.
Cheers,
Red Devil

Joined: Sat May 01, 2004 3:42 pmPosts: 129Location: 'Burbs of the Windy City

Red Devil,

The procedures worked for me and I got to my backed up data on a NTFS
drive. Thanks. For me the issue was that the drive got mounted as root read only.
After I follwed your procedures, I got it to mount as read-write for normal users.

I also found out that if you use the "WIne FIle", the NTFS drive showed up.
Don't know if wine could have detected it with out the kernel upgrade.
I will have to try if using wine file, I can write to it as a normal user.

i only have read access, no write access for both my ntfs drive and my fat32 drive, is there a way i can enable write access? i would like to use my fat32 drive as common storage space until i completely switch over to linux.

i only have read access, no write access for both my ntfs drive and my fat32 drive, is there a way i can enable write access? i would like to use my fat32 drive as common storage space until i completely switch over to linux.

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